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1[[quoteright:320:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/picket_fences.jpeg]]
2
3->''"This place is nuts!"''
4-->-- '''FBI Agent Donald Morrell'''
5
6Welcome to the small town of Rome, Wisconsin, where everyone knows everyone and the bizarre is an everyday occurrence. Created by Creator/DavidEKelley, the UsefulNotes/EmmyAward-winning family/cop/legal/medical dramedy ''Picket Fences'' ran on Creator/{{CBS}} for four seasons (1992–96) and 88 episodes, before it was cancelled for being a little ''too'' weird for its own good.
7
8The show centers around the residents of Rome, in particular the functionally dysfunctional Brock family consisting of the town's Sheriff, Jimmy Brock (Creator/TomSkerritt); his wife, Jill (Creator/KathyBaker); their daughter, Kimberly (Creator/HollyMarieCombs); and their two sons, Matthew (Creator/JustinShenkarow) and Zachary (Creator/AdamWylie). Sheriff Brock, along with his deputies at the Rome Sheriff's Department, sometimes struggles to maintain order faced with such strange crimes and occurrences as cow udders exploding and a spate of people turning up dead in freezers. During its tenure, the show also dealt with unusual-for-the-time topics including (but not limited to) abortion, homophobia and LGBT adoption, transgender identity, racism, belief in God, medical ethics, polygamy, polyamory, adolescent sexuality, date rape, masturbation, the Holocaust, cryonics, shoe fetishism, {{spontaneous human combustion}}, and constitutional rights.
9
10The series is also notable for providing the first long-term wide exposure for actors Creator/DonCheadle (as District Attorney John Littleton), Creator/LaurenHolly (as Deputy Maxine Stewart), and Creator/CostasMandylor (as Deputy Kenny Lakos). Also in the cast were Creator/KellyConnell (as Medical Examiner Carter Pike), Creator/FyvushFinkel (as Public Defender Douglas Wambaugh), Creator/MarleeMatlin (as "Dancing Bandit" Laurie Bey), Creator/ZeldaRubinstein (as Dispatcher Ginny Weedon), and Creator/RayWalston (as Judge Henry Bone).
11
12Thanks to ExecutiveMeddling and various legal battles, only the first season has been released on DVD.[[note]]In the United States, anyway; all four seasons have been released in both Australia and Germany, although the picture quality suffers due to the PAL frame rate. Also, there ''is'' a release of the entire series for Region 0, meaning that it's theoretically a universally-accepted DVD; however, it's anyone's guess as to its actual playability.[[/note]]
13
14Now with an added [[Characters/PicketFences character page]] that could do with some more love.
15
16----
17
18!!This show provides one or more examples of:
19* AdultsAreUseless: Matthew and Zach are often forced to get advice about the birds and the bees from CoolBigSis Kimberly because their parents are too squicked out to be of any use.
20* AggressiveCategorism: The whole town are guilty of this at times, especially with their treatment of Frank the Potato Man and the black students from Green Bay in the third season.
21* AnyoneCanDie: Sympathetic guest characters can die, [[spoiler:starting with a CoolTeacher with a tumor in the third episode]]: [[spoiler:Father Barrett, Barnaby Wood, Frank the Potato Man, and three different mayors]] can all attest that recurring characters can suffer bizarre deaths, as does main cast member [[spoiler:Ginny]].
22* ArtisticLicenseGunSafety: Sheriff Brock ought to know everything there is to know about keeping guns secure at home, yet [[spoiler: Zachary]] has no trouble retrieving Jimmy's pistol and pantomiming pot-shots at [[spoiler: Matthew's]] attacker when no one else is around. Played ''completely serious'', and chilling.
23* BelligerentSexualTension: Kenny and Max.
24** A one-sided example would be from Jimmy and his ex-wife Lydia, much to Jill's chagrin.
25* TheBigBoard: The FBI and the Sheriff's Department are seen using one of these in "The Green Bay Chopper".
26* BirthDeathJuxtaposition: In the first season finale Max and Kenny help deliver a baby whilst the scene juxtaposes with the Brocks watching a jazz singer collapse mid-performance at a concert that Zach is performing in. Eventually averted as the jazz singer doesn't actually die.
27* BodyInABreadbox: A corpse was discovered stuffed into a dishwasher. Also, freezers. ''Lots'' of people get found in freezers.
28* BookEnds: The opening scene in the pilot episode and the final scene in the series finale both involve the townspeople all together at a public setting, the Town Player's performance of ''Film/TheWizardOfOz'' in the pilot and [[spoiler:the triple wedding of Max/Kenny, Carter/Sue and Wambaugh/Miriam in the finale.]]
29* ButICantBePregnant: A comatose car crash victim is found to be pregnant even though she is a virgin. [[spoiler:They find out her doctor is a religious fanatic who [[MedicalRapeAndImpregnate impregnated her through IVF without her knowledge]]. When she threatened to tell the police, he tampered with her car's brakes.]]
30** A friend of Kimberly's becomes pregnant even though she had previously claimed to be a virgin.[[spoiler: She was having sex with her "father," actually her polygamous husband]]
31* Catchphrase: Only a few, but they are good. Carter frequently says "I should be deputized". The judge often yells "GET OUT!", usually at Wambaugh. Mr. Wambaugh himself likes say "Its because I'm Jewish" and "I'm a character!" inside and outside the court room.
32* CerebusSyndrome: The show started out as a quirky, light-hearted SliceOfLife, then morphed once into a PoliceProcedural involving the hunt for [[SerialKiller serial killers]], then again into an {{Anvilicious}} [[LawProcedural courtroom drama]]. There's also how the show took quirky comedy concepts from its first few episodes and have them turn out to have a rather dark realistic payoff. That amusing CloudCuckooLander with some of the funniest lines in the show? Turns out he has Alzheimers, which eventually leads to a tragic downward spiral.
33* ChristmasCarolers: If you're in Rome, Wisconsin and it's Christmas, you'll most likely be serenaded by 'The Wambaugh Multicultural Singers'.
34* CloseKnitCommunity: Rome is certainly one of those.
35* ConfidentialityBetrayal: Sheriff Brock has apprehended a criminal, and brought him to trial. The defendant's counsel, Douglas Wambaugh, puts the sheriff on the stand and asks him how he determined the defendant was the culprit. The sheriff replies that his wife, the town surgeon, patched up wounds on the defendant that are consistent with his crime. When Wambaugh asks the sheriff if he sought a warrant before this information was divulged, the sheriff answers no, to which Wambaugh declares, "Tainted fruits," and retires his defense. The judge reminds the sheriff that a physician's confidence is sacrosanct, and cannot be divulged unless under warrant. The whole case is dismissed because Jill broke her vow of patient confidentiality.
36* ContinuityNod: Characters that are only seen in one episode will often pop up later in the narrative, for example Frank the Potato Man in the first season episode of the same name who then reappears in season two's "Abominable Snowman" and season three's "Saint Zach".
37* CrossOver: The show crosses over with Creator/DavidEKelley's other show ''Series/ChicagoHope'' in the episode "Rebels with Causes".
38** Interestingly the show was also originally going to have an episode crossover with ''Series/TheXFiles'' where Mulder and Scully would travel to Rome to investigate bizarre genetic experiments on cows but it never materialized because CBS and Fox wouldn't agree to it - the only traces of it existing are the Picket Fences episode "Away in the Manger" and the X-Files episode "Red Museum".
39* {{Cult}}: In the first season's "Nuclear Meltdown", Max investigates an obscure religious sect which she suspects of being a Satanic cult.
40* DamselInDistress: Seen a couple of times, notably when Kimberly gets kidnapped in the second season. Amusingly lampshaded by Max in the episode "High Tidings" when a crazy guy in a Santa outfit takes her and Ginny hostage and she snipes at him about how sexist it is that he chose the two female members of staff at the Sheriff's Department.
41* DiagonalBilling: With Tom Skerritt and Kathy Baker.
42* DidNotThinkThisThrough: The (17-year-old) perp in the Season 3 finale "The Song of Rome" is a gambling addict in debt for a $1000 to a bookie. So he decides to get his hands on an ''expensive'' Uzi and ammunition. Then go to the local church, enter a confessional and after confessing to said addiction, tells the Priest he has a gun and wants his wallet; a priest who likely took a vow of poverty. Therefore, he probably didn't carry that much cash on him or have any items worth much. Then shoots him leaving the priest brain dead (he later dies of his injuries) when he doesn't comply. Then ends up in a pursuit--by a Sheriffs Department with experienced, well-armed and trained deputies that respond rapidly--that ends at a shootout at his house with him wounded and in custody.
43* DinnerAndAShow: Whenever the Brocks have dinner guests. Wambaugh [[LampshadeHanging lampshaded]] it when urging another guest to accept an invitation: "Strange things happen when they ''eat''."
44* DoubleStandardRapeFemaleOnMale: A male teacher accuses a woman of raping him. The defense is based on [[NotIfTheyEnjoyedItRationalization the fact that the man climaxed]]. In the end, the woman is found not guilty.
45* DramaticThunder: Used a few times, most notably in the Halloween episode "Remembering Rosemary".
46* DrivenToSuicide: A repentant pedophile who moves to town and gets chilly-to-hostile receptions from everyone, including Judge Bone [[spoiler:his father]].
47* DudeNotFunny: In-universe example. After Wambaugh tells an un-PC joke about Jews and Native Americans (during a funeral eulogy, no less), the local rabbi tries to have him excommunicated.
48* DysfunctionJunction: ''Everyone'' in Rome has problems.
49* EasySexChange: Subverted in "Pageantry" when the post-operative transgender teacher explains to Jimmy the lengths that she had to go through to change her gender.
50* EccentricTownsfolk: The town of Rome has these in abundance including (but not limited to) the highly eccentric Parkes family (Mrs Parkes always disciplines her unruly daughter Cynthia by stuffing something, usually clean socks, in her mouth), the elderly Howard Buss who confesses to every crime committed in the town, local vagrant 'Frank the Potato Man', a pair of identical twins that finish each other's sentences, frog-obsessed Peter Lebeck who performs self-written musical numbers about his favorite amphibians at PTA meetings, palm reading pyschic police dispatcher Ginny, Laurie 'The Dancing Bandit' Bey, and of course, the audacious BunnyEarsLawyer, Douglas Wambaugh.
51** Although many of these characters are PlayedForDrama instead of PlayedForLaughs
52* FacialDialogue: Used frequently by most of the cast when they are shown reacting to the crazy antics of another character.
53* FamilyDrama: A large portion of the show is centered around the Brock family and their various dramas.
54* {{Fetish}}: The season two episode "My Left Shoe" deals with the town's Catholic priest who, it is discovered, has a shoe fetish.
55* FramingTheGuiltyParty: "Frank The Potato Man" inverts this by having the guilty party [[spoiler: DA Barnaby Wood]] deliberately trying to commit a crime (in this case, breaking and entering people's homes so as to take a bath for sexual kicks) when he believed the titular character (who's wrongly suspected of the crimes) would have an alibi (in this case, by being in police custody or under surveillance). Unfortunately, it doesn't quite work out, as both times Frank had be released
56* HeadbuttOfLove: Seen a few times throughout the show, usually by Jimmy and Jill and Max and Kenny.
57* HighTurnoverRate: Mayors of Rome have died from SpontaneousCombustion, being pushed into freezers, and gunshots. Others have gotten thrown into jail or run out of office for making porn.
58* INeverToldYouMyName: A variation of this trope is used in "Be My Valentine" when FBI Agent Morrell realizes that his former colleague may be the 'Cupid Killer' because he references Morrell being sent a Christmas card by the said killer when Morrell never reported the fact to the FBI or told anyone else.
59* InterruptedIntimacy [=/=] MomentKiller: This happens a few times, most notably the entire Brock family bursting in on Kimberly having sex with her boyfriend in the first season and Rachel Harris bursting in on Max and Kenny in the second season. In the latter YourDoorWasOpen is inverted as it ''wasn't'', Rachel used her key to Kenny's apartment to let herself in.
60* JurisdictionFriction: "The Green Bay Chopper" has the Sheriff's Department and some FBI agents squabbling over the titular serial kidnapper who cuts off his victim's hands, who is believed to have killed his latest (making it a state rather than federal crime). At one point, Maxine draws her gun on the agents! This mostly goes away when they catch the guy, however.
61* LittlePeopleAreSurreal: Ginny Weedon portrayed by Zelda Rubinstein, who basically plays the same part that she did in ''Film/{{Poltergeist|1982}}''. It never stopped her from complaining about little people stereotypes, though.
62** Also Peter Dreeb, who's not all that surreal in and of himself, but is introduced riding down the road on an elephant [[spoiler: He and the elephant are running away from the circus where he was employed, and where Mr. Dreeb claims it had been abused]]
63* LocardsTheory: Used liberally throughout the show.
64* LondonEnglandSyndrome: Rome, ''Wisconsin''.
65* LonersAreFreaks: Frank the Potato Man, who lives alone in the woods and has a tendency to loiter around schools staring at the children. He gets suspected of breaking into the homes of teenage girls and bathing in their tubs while masturbating [[spoiler: It turns out to be the popular, young, handsome District Attorney]]. Frank leaves Rome in disgust by the end of the episode.
66* MagicalNativeAmerican: Averted in the episode "Rights of Passage" in which the local Chippewa tribe storm the courthouse and declare war on the town of Rome for approving plans to build a golf course on their sacred burial ground. The tribe are merely portrayed as human beings who are desperately fighting for their way of life to continue to exist and are never given the 'Magical Native American' treatment.
67* TheMainCharactersDoEverything: Jimmy has lots of deputies, but Kenny and Max are the only ones who ever seem to do anything remotely relevant to the plot, besides one episode where Kenny is in the hospital and another deputy gets to be a SpearCarrier until Kenny recovers.
68* MarryThemAll: inverted, in the episode with the bigamist who cites his Mormon beliefs as a defense, Judge Bone tells the man that they'll drop the charges if he divorces one of his wives, even if she continues to live with him and his legal wife in a common law relationship.
69* MassageOfLove: An episode has the murder investigation of a local masseuse who dealt out these and {{Happy Ending Massage}}s with Jimmy becoming upset that both Jill and Kimberly patronized him (although they were harmless back and foot massages, respectively, and his wife explained that part of the reason why he was so successful and well-liked by the women in town was because he also listened to their problems whereas their husbands didn't). At the end of the episode, intercut with scenes of the man's funeral, Jimmy gives Jill a tender body massage.
70* MayDecemberRomance: In "Thanksgiving" Jill's father shows up to thanksgiving dinner with a beautiful 26 year old fiancee, much to Jill's horror. Eventually subverted as it's revealed that the fiancee is suffering from Cystic Fibrosis and Jill's father will most likely end up outliving ''her'', not the other way around. Jill, eventually seeing the genuine love between them, ultimately tries to mend fences.
71* MistakenForIncest: In one episode, Kimberly Brock sees her best friend kissing her father. She reports it to her own father, the town sheriff. In court it's revealed by Douglas Waumbaugh that the young woman is not the man's daughter. The man is a polygamist, and the girl is his second wife, posing as his daughter publicly, with her "mother" being the first wife. Judge Bone points out that the laws against polygamy may one day be challenged on religious grounds to the Supreme Court, and he doesn't want [[SitcomArchNemesis Waumbaugh]] to be the one who brings the case, so urges the town to get the man to dissolve one of his marriages, preferably his eighteen year old bride, the one that started the whole mess in the first place.
72* MoodWhiplash: Due to the 'dramedy' nature of the show it would often switch between serious, dramatic A-plots to more light hearted 'comedic relief' B-plots, often within the same episode.
73* TheMountainsOfIllinois: In this case, Wisconsin. Palm trees can also be seen occasionally.
74* MusicalEpisode: Whilst not being an outright musical episode, the third season finale "The Song of Rome" featured the town putting on a spring pageant and the various self-written and [[HilarityEnsues hilariously inappropriate]] musical numbers that Wambaugh tries to get into it.
75--->"It is now my chance to seize her, As her husband's in a freezer, One whack on the head, He's dead, And now she's mine."
76* NosyNeighbor: Rome is full of them, whenever the Sheriff's Department are attempting to investigate a crime that is of local interest, it seems like the entire town converge on the station to find out what's happening.
77* ObstructiveBureaucrat: The current mayor (Rome goes through a lot of them) often seems to fill this role (Howard Buss and Laurie Bey are the least obstructive), especially Mayor Bill Pugen in the first season who is so obsessed with the town's reputation and his prospects of being re-elected at the next mayoral election that he is constantly trying the stop the Sheriff's Department from openly investigating crimes that might reflect badly on the town.
78* OffWithHisHead: The ultimate fate of [[spoiler:the ''fifth'' mayor, Ed Lawson, who was killed by his wife.]]
79* ParentalIncest: It initially appears like one of Kimberley's friends is having sex with her father. [[spoiler: Her father is actually her husband, who's in a polygamous relationship with her and her "mother"]]
80* PatientOfTheWeek: Seen by Jill, who has up-to-date knowledge of every disease and the latest treatments.
81* PlaguedByNightmares: Zach is seen suffering from nightmares about death in the first season episode "Sacred Hearts" after he visits an elderly patient with Jill and they find her dead in her hospital bed.
82* PluckyComicRelief: Tragically subverted in the case of Howard Buss who in a few early episodes is nothing more than the amusing crazy old guy who confesses to every crime committed in Rome, but later turns out to be suffering from Alzheimers and suffers one of the saddest fates seen in the show.
83* PromotionToOpeningTitles: The opening titles in the first season contained only Tom Skerritt (Jimmy), Kathy Baker (Jill), Costas Mandylor (Kenny), Lauren Holly (Max), Creator/HollyMarieCombs (Kimberly), Justin Shenkarow (Matthew) and Adam Wylie (Zach). The second season saw the addition of Fyvush Finkel (Wambaugh), Ray Walston (Judge Bone) and Zelda Rubinstein (Ginny). The third season then also added Don Cheadle (D.A. Littleton) and Kelly Connell (Carter) and removed Zelda Rubinstein after she left the show. The fourth and final season added Marlee Matlin (Laurie) and later removed Don Cheadle after he also left mid-way through the season.
84* PsychoPsychologist [=/=] StalkerWithACrush: Max gets herself one of these in the second season. Her therapist is revealed to be obsessively in love with her and, helped by the fact that she is already emotionally vulnerable at the time, he manipulates her into entering into a sexual relationship with him and even attempts to turn her against her friends and become completely dependant on him.
85* QuirkyTown: Rome has this trope in spades.
86* ReptilesAreAbhorrent: In "The Snake Lady", the titular character is obsessed with snakes and is, of course, evil.
87* SerialKiller: In the season one episode "Be My Valentine", the Sheriff's Department assist the FBI in hunting for the 'Cupid Killer', a serial killer that meets his female victims through lonely hearts columns and then brutally murders them in their own homes.
88* ShamingTheMob: An unusual example, as Bone shames a group celebrating a girl escaping punishment for selling drugs. She'd been charged at the local level after admitting to trying the drugs and then attempting to sell the remainder of her supply to classmates after she determined that she didn't like them. But the Feds wanted to make an example of her that they treated white drug dealers just as harshly as minorities. John Littleton, who'd made that very point in the hearing, sabotages the case because he felt the federal mandatory punishment of ten years was too harsh for a teenager who did something stupid and ignorant rather than acting maliciously. But when everyone starts celebrating that the case being sabotaged meant she was getting off Scot-free, Bone reminds her sharply that she was, in fact, guilty and deserved punishment, and was only being spared because of Littleton's mercy, not for anything just or righteous on her part.
89* ShockParty: Used hilariously in "For Whom the Wind Blows".
90* SingleMindedTwins [=/=] TwinTelepathy: For a while Kenny dates a pair of SeparatedAtBirth twin sisters whose connection is so strong that it draws them together. They're the ones who insist on dating him jointly. In their first appearance, one sister has to pull her car over on the side of the road and orgasm while her sister is having sex with Kenny... and they haven't even met yet.
91* SliceOfLife: The show was this much more in it's early days, focusing heavily around the Brock family and the dynamics of the town of Rome itself. Over time it seemed to shift towards the police procedural and courtroom drama plots more heavily but still managed to juggle the different elements pretty successfully.
92* SocietyIsToBlame: This argument is used by Wambaugh when he is defending the boy who nonfatally shot Matthew in the episode "Remote Control", particularly the effect of violent television and video games. [[spoiler: It doesn't work.]]
93* SomeoneToRememberHimBy: GenderInverted in multiple episodes.
94** In "[[spoiler:Thanksgiving]]," a woman who has cystic fibrosis and will die from it in a few years discusses wanting to have a baby first.
95** In "The Body Politic," a brain-dead car accident victim is pregnant, and her husband and mother go to court arguing about whether to keep her on life support long enough for her child to be born, with her husband calling that idea one of the only things he has left after her accident and discussing how the baby will have her eyes.
96* SpiritualSuccessor: The show is a pretty clear spiritual successor for ''Series/TwinPeaks'' which ended in the year that ''Picket Fences'' began and heralded the beginning of the trend of 'quirky small town' dramas that persisted throughout the nineties. Twin Peaks was a lot darker and more surreal then Picket Fences however, and Picket Fences never overtly veered into the supernatural.
97* SpontaneousHumanCombustion: The depressed, alcoholic mayor was written out of the plot by having him spontaneously combust in his own house. He already figured his political career was over, apparently making him a literal burnout was the final blow to the character.
98* SweepsWeekLesbianKiss: Kimberly and her best friend kiss during a sleepover, causing Kimberly's parents to panic.
99* TheTeaser: Every single episode has one before the [[TitleSequence opening credits]].
100* ToBeContinued [=/=] MultiPartEpisode: ''"Previously on Picket Fences..."'' There were quite a few of these due to the 'ongoing plot' nature of the show and some individual storylines continuing over multiple episodes.
101* TruthSerums: Used by Jill in the episode "Remembering Rosemary" to provoke a selective mute witness to a murder/suicide into talking.
102* TwoLinesNoWaiting / PlotParallel: Due to the fact that the show had a fairly large ensemble cast and it also had so many story elements (family drama, cop drama, legal drama, e.t.c), all of the episodes featured at least two plotlines (sometimes more) and the narrative would jump between them. The two (or more) plots would also often tie together or relate to each other in some way.
103* VitriolicBestBuds: Douglas Wambaugh and Judge Henry Bone, who would also double as HeterosexualLifePartners.
104** Kenny and Max also count as a slightly milder version of the trope.
105* WakingUpAtTheMorgue: In the season three episode "Close Encounters", Carter mispronounces a lounge singer who collapses on stage and she later wakes up in the morgue, screams her head off, falls off the slab and proceeds to get a concussion.
106* WeddingsForEveryone: The series finale involves a triple wedding for [[spoiler: Max/Kenny, Carter/Sue and Wambaugh/Miriam who are renewing their vows.]]
107%%* WillTheyOrWontThey: Kenny and Max's relationship is based off of this.
108* WrongInsultOffence: A shock jock who was the focus of the episode has found his audience turning on him. One of them addresses him by epithets for a Jewish person, to which he replies, "I'm not even Jewish. If you want to slur me, call me a Kraut, you ignorant pig-farmer."

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